Hi, Welcome to Our School of Home Staging!

After a successful, 12+ years run as a home staging company in San Francisco Bay Area, STAGED4MORE is now an online school that focuses on home staging education for home stagers, home sellers and real estate agents.

Please take some time and check out all the free resources and tips available on our blog & podcast, as well as our courses selections.

SCHOOL OF HOME STAGING

Apr 28

Apr 28 Our Process for Staging Homes

Having been in the home staging industry for almost 1o years, my sister and I have developed a process to help us pull a house together and create the best results for our clients. Having a process in place is important. It helps to simplify our decision making and inventory selection, be more efficient with our work-load and break the debate if we butt heads on styling decisions. It is an ever-revolving process and technology like 17hats also helps to keep us on track. Having a system is crucial in running any business, this is one of the best lessons I’ve learned working for Michael Gerber, author of E-Myth.

Today I’m giving you a peek at our process so that you might take away a couple helpful insights that make working with a home stager or staging your listing less frustrating and more efficient for you.

1. LOGISTICS SUPPORT

I have to mention logistics here because our job is filled with lots of moving pieces, so having a good handle on logistics is important.

We brought on Anita last fall, whose official title is Project Coordinator. She has been a great add to me & Yi Hsuen, helping us managing logistics, scheduling and invoices. The main decision behind hiring Anita was inspired by my experience working on photo shoots.

Having an agent really freed me up from worrying about paperwork and contract negotiations and allowed me to do what I do best on set. Having gone through that experience, my sister and I realized that we were getting bogged down by the day-to-day stuff, and we were distracted from getting the real business done — delivering a great staged home to our clients and passion projects like developing programs about home staging (like our 30-Day Home Staging Challenge online course and some other cool mini courses in the next few months).

Having a workflow and templates in 17hats helped a lot. Anita, who is much better with customer service and logistics, is able to access the system easily and follows through. Because we almost tripled our volume last year, we switched to credit card payments and electronic signatures only to eliminate inefficiency and paperwork.

Having logistics support really helped us to have a smoother onboarding process with new clients, build a better client relationship.

2. ON SITE VISIT & DRAFTING THE PROPOSAL

When a client calls, whether potential or repeat clients, I generally have a brief conversations with him/her to get a sense of the scope of the project. This is also a pre-screening process to see if we would be a good fit with their project.

Once the initial phone conversation has happened, Anita schedules / confirms an on site visit with the clients. On site visit is crucial because it gives us a great idea on what the neighborhood is like, who the target buyers may be and what finishes and color schemes we will use for staging.

This process can also get time-consuming on the back end, even though it may only look like the two of us had spent 15-30 minutes on site writing notes & taking photos for planning purposes. This is also why we had decided to start billing for on-site visits, because typically with bay area traffic, it takes about an hour or more to get to the site and back, not to mention we usually meet for another 15-30 minutes to discuss design plan for the property. So overall, drafting a proposal can take 2-3 hours.

3. IN STUDIO: DESIGN & PREP

Before we prep, my sister and I sit down together again and go through our notes & photos we took during our site visit. We would go through the photos room by room and double checking the proposal to see what we would need to pull to work with the home’s existing colors, finishes and architecture details. We print out our prep list and off we go.

Much like our actual staging process, we work from big to small. We normally pick the largest pieces first, like sofa, coffee table, rug, accent chairs, etc. and work our way down. Pulling and packing accessories take the most time.

Usually, our prep process takes 4-6 hours with both of us working. I’d pull accessories, decorative items, floral and Yi Hsuen pulls lighting, artwork and writing up the locations of the big pieces that are going to get packed first. (This is why we asked clients for at least a 3-day notice before scheduling the installation date, because we need to schedule time in for prep.)

4. STAGING DAY!

Our movers usually arrive at 8am, but my sister and I generally shows up at 7am to make sure we have everything ready before the job. Typically, load out takes about 1-1.5 hours, depending on the size of the job. Plus bay area traffic, we generally arrive on site between 10-11am. Once we arrive at the house, it’s a flurry of activities.

Our movers have been with us for a long time now and they know roughly where we want to drop furniture. They also know that they will need to assemble the beds, furniture and move all the bins to the kitchen. Once bins are out, I start unpacking everything, so we can visually shop decor pieces and accessories to style each room. Like the way we pull, we drop the big pieces first.

Once furniture plan is set, we start making beds, steaming linens. Generally when I style, Yi Hsuen starts placing and installing artwork. Depending whichever of us finishes earlier than the other, we start packing up for the day.

Before we leave, we do an once-over, to make sure every corner is covered and we are happy with the overall staging. More importantly, the home looks ready to photograph.

5. MARKETING

I’ll be the first to admit that we are usually not as diligent as we should be on this. :/

But I normally try to whip out some sort of blog posts or at least Instagram about it (at some point.). Social media is fairly important nowadays, since we actually see an increase in web traffic and sometimes even lead to other projects when we share our work.

6. WRAP & PACK

Once the home is sold, contingencies are removed (until contingencies are removed, your home sale is not yet a done deal. The deal can still fall apart.), Anita schedules a date for de-staging. We will go to the house at 7-7:30am and start packing. Movers show up at 8 to move everything out. Generally depends on the size of the project, on-site removal can take 2-3 hours and in studio, another 1-2 hours. After movers leave, we unpack the bins and restock everything.

All in all, from initial contact, prep, on-site staging to de-staging, pack and wrap, a home staging project can take about 75-85 man hours on average to complete.

I probably shared too many details here, but I’ve learned being transparent about our process has helped our clients understand how we work. Staging the home right can be a time-consuming process. One that has a lot of invisible pieces that are unseen and therefore undermined by our clients.

It is a lot of hard work. To have a fully stock 5800+ square feet prop house takes time to cultivate and develop. We also have to constantly be on our toes with trends and new inventory by frequently visiting vendors and furniture shows. But all is well worth it when we can pull something awesome together for our clients.

There you have it! That’s our staging process in a nutshell!

If you are a home stager reading this post, what does your home staging process look like? If you are a real estate agent or seller, are you surprised by what we go through to successfully stage a house? I’d love to hear from you!

I have been helping home sellers and real estate agents sell their listings since early 2006 and had staged $500M+ worth of real estate. In the last few years, Staged4more is relaunched as a School of Home Staging where we offer home staging courses for home owners (30-Day Home Staging Challenge) and business builders for home stagers (Launcher and 6-Figure Floor Plan). We also have plenty of free resources on the site, like our home staging blog and the podcast The Home Staging Show.

I have been helping home sellers and real estate agents sell their listings since early 2006 and had staged $500M+ worth of real estate. In the last few years, Staged4more is relaunched as a School of Home Staging where we offer home staging courses for home owners (30-Day Home Staging Challenge) and business builders for home stagers (Launcher and 6-Figure Floor Plan). We also have plenty of free resources on the site, like our home staging blog and the podcast The Home Staging Show.

Hi there, thanks for visiting our online home. This is a hub for all things home staging.

Do You Have an Amazing Home Staging Project?

If so, we would like to feature your work! It will look something like this. If you’re interested, apply and send us your staged properties here. We would love to toot your horn and feature your beautiful work!

Our blog was named #3 of Top 100 Home Staging Blogs and Websites For Home Stagers in 2018. Thank you for your support!

Sometimes in our blog posts, we may have affiliate links or sponsorship links. This means that we receive a small perk when you click on the link, but it does not cost you anything if you purchase through our affiliate links. It's just another way for us to support the costs of running the site and creating content.

We often write and have guest bloggers contribute content for our home staging blog. While we do our best to curate the best content for you, we cannot guarantee the accuracy of content, especially if you are reading posts from ages ago. You should always consult a (or several) local real estate expert(s) who know your market well. Especially those decisions that will cost you moolahs to accomplish.

If you like our content, feel free to share it with others. But please do not copy and paste without attribution. That’s just crappy and unethical. We will not feel bad about submitting legal documents to wipe your site off the internet. (Yeah, it can be done and we’ve done it.)

Lastly, if you see any grammatical, spelling or whatever error on this site, would you be so kind, send us an email and tell us? So we can fix it (or them)? A snarky emails criticizing free content that benefits your bottom line is not really very productive nor very nice.

Thanks for being so cool and supporting us since 2006. We really appreciate you and will continue to do our best to provide you with values and lots of goodies.